Manadel al-Jamadi

Manadel al-Jamadi (died 4 November 2003) was an Iraqi detainee at Abu Ghraib prison who was tortured to death by the United States on 4 November 2003.

Biography
Manadel al-Jamadi was from Iraq, and the United States believed him to be responsible for the 27 October 2003 Baghdad bombings, which killed 12 people at the Red Cross offices. al-Jamadi was arrested and sent to the Abu Ghraib prison camp, and on 4 November 2003 he was brought into the prison with a green sandbag over his head and wearing only a purple shirt. He was tied up by his wrists for 30 minutes and was interrogated, with his handlers asking where some weapons where. The interrogation was fruitless, and he died in torture. The Americans decided to hide his death by putting him under ice, and they later took him away from the prison with an IV attached to him to make it seem as if he was alive so as to prevent a prison riot. His death was one of the most famous incidents from Abu Ghraib, the site of mass torture of prisoners.